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RUTH 



SACRED DRAMA, 



AND 



ORIGINAL LYEICAL POEMS, 



BY 



FRANCES ELIZABETH BROWNE. 




NEW YORK : 
PRESS OF WYNKOOP & HALLEN B EOT, 

No. 113 Fulton Street. 
1871. 






ENTERED, according to the Act of Congress, in the year 1871, by 

FRANCES ELIZABETH BROWNE, 

In the Office of the Librarian of Congress at Washington. 



PREFACE 



I HAVE been called upon to write a preface to this 
little volume. 

With regard to the Drama, my idea of it was taken 
from a suggestion of our late celebrated English author- 
ess, Mrs. Hannah More, in her introduction to her Sacred 
Dramas, that some other writer would carry out her de- 
sire, and make the admirable and exalted materials for 
poetry which the Bible contains the basis of other simi- 
lar works. 

This attempt, though weak and imperfect and very 
inferior to those of my great predecessor in this interest- 
ing path, may, I hope, be kindly received, as in some 
small degree drawing attention to the inexhaustible 
source from whence we derive every good and perfect 
gift. 

A volume of my Lyrical Poems (as Mr. Longfellow 
was pleased to call them, and which received his un- 
qualified approbation) were printed and so kindly re- 
ceived some years ago in Cambridge and Boston that 
two editions were sold out without the aid of a bookseller. 
Whether it was from their own merits, or from the kind 
patronage of my influential friends, I know not; but 
the fact of their being so quickly disposed of in this 
manner, encourages me to offer this later work to the 
public, with some other small pieces written since of a 
similar kind to my first, and also as many poems from 
the original publication as could well be included in a 
moderate-sized book. 

How I have succeeded in this effort, I leave my readers 
to decide. 



CONTENTS. 



PAGE 

Ruth : a Drama, 5 

Stanzas suggested by a View of Boston from 

the Cupola of the State House, - - 31 

Mount Auburn, - 34 

On the Stormy Petrel, 36 

On the Departure of a Clergyman for Eu- 
rope FOR THE BENEFIT OF HIS HEALTH, - 39 

On the Death of Henry Clay, - - - -42 

On the Mission to India, 44 
Lines on an Incident connected with the 

Baptism of twenty-four Converts, - - 47 

Lines on an Accident in Prince's Bay, S. I., 49 

On the Assassination of President Lincoln, 5 1 
On Professor Lowe's Balloon Ascension, 

near Richmond, 53 

On the Death of my Mother, - - - 55 

On the Letter O, ------ 57 

On the Vision of St. John, - - - - 58 

On the Miracle of Mount Horeb, - - 61 

Bray Head, Wicklow, 62 

Lines to ', 6 4 

The Missionary, 65 

Pain and Pleasure, ------ 67 

On seeing some Children blowing Bubbles, 68 



Vlll CONTENTS. 

PAGE 

Lines suggested by the Distress in Ireland, 

in 1847, 69 

Scene after a Hurricane, - - - - 71 

Welcome Song to Jenny Lind, - - - 74 

On Music, 7 6 

Lines to a Friend, 78 

The Wager, 80 

A Sketch, - 82 

L' inconstant, - 84 

Self-examination, 85 

Lines on the Death of a Young Lady, - 87 
On the Death of the Dowager Lady Powers- 
court, - 89 

Metrical Letter to Miss N- — -, - - - 92 

A Sketch of Connemara, ----- 94 

To a Friend, ------- 97 

To a Young Lady during Sickness, - - - 99 

Lines for an Album, 101 

The three Ages of human life, - - - 103 
Lines suggestive of the heroic defence of 

Vera Cruz, ------- 104 

On the death of a favorite Cat, - - - 106 

On the Baptism of an Infant, - - - 109 

To a Friend, - - - - - - - m 

On the Birth of an Infant, - - - - 112 

To Annie, - - 113 

An Acrostic, ------- 114 

Hymn, - - - - - - - - - ll S 

On the Anniversary of my Birthday, - - 116 

Lines to an old Schoolfellow, - - - 120 



SUBSCRIBERS. 



THE UNDERSIGNED WERE AMONGST THE ORIGINAL 
SUBSCRIBERS TO MRS. BROWNE'S POEMS. 



HARVARD UNIVERSITY. 

Henry W. Longfellow. Professor Norton. 



Hon. Edward Everett. 



C. Beak. 



Henry Dexter. 



CAMBRIDGE. 

| Mr. Lovering. 
Mr. Felton. 



BOSTON. 



Hon. Abbott Lawrence. 
Hon. Charles Sumner. 
Samuel Austin. 
Bishop Eastburn. 
Samuel Appleton. 
William Appleton. 
Nathan Appleton. 
Henry G. Rice. 
J. Quincy. 
James C. Dunn. 
William Elliott. 
N. L. Frothingham. 
A. A. Lawrence. 

Tyler 



Robert C. Winthrop. 
George Tickner. 
W. H. Prescott. 
Ives G. Bates. 
J. D. Farnsworth. 
George T. Goddard. 
H. G. Otis. 

Alex. W. Vinton, D.D. 
Franklin Haven. 
Oliver Wendall Holmes. 
A. Tewksbury. 
Wm. R. Lawrence. 
C. Frederick Adams, Jr. 
Bigelow. 



LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS. 



CHARLESTON. 



John T. Sargent. 



Jared Sparks. 
S. C. Phillips. 
Thos. T. Stone. 
H. Devereux. 
Mrs. F. S. Carruth. 
Mrs. Wiggin. 
Mrs. Wm. W. Stone. 
Mrs. J- Bigelow. 
Mrs. E. Rollins. 
Mrs. Geo. Darracott. 
Mrs. T. H. Swett. 



SALEM. 

Miss A. Southwick. 

Mrs. Shaw. 

Mrs. Adams. 

Mrs. Albree. 

Mrs. Enoch Train. 

Mrs. Gardner Brewer. 

Mrs. R. Lawrence. 

Mrs. F. B. Crowninshield. 

Miss Tuckerman. 

Mrs. R S. Fry. 

Miss E. Wheelock. 



Joseph R. Chandler 
J. P. Durbin, D.D. 
W. P. Wood. 
M. N. Fay. 
Lucretia Mott. 
Mrs. E. Biddle. 
Mrs. M. Patterson. 
Mr. H. A. Grubb. 
Mrs. Joseph Wood. 
Mrs. Brock. 
Mrs. Jane Sill. 
Mrs. Frick. 



PHILADELPHIA. 

Mrs. Isaac Elliott. 
Mrs. Horace Binney. 
Mrs. Cadwallader. 
Mrs. Eleanor Glenholm. 
Mrs. Goddard. 
Mrs. N. Biddle. 
Mrs. Robert Hare. 
Mrs. Cope. 

Mrs. J. Forsyth Meigs. 
Mrs. Blaine. 
Mrs. G. F. Lewis. 
Mrs. Trevor. 
Mrs. Lan^. 



LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS. 



NEW 


YORK. 


H. W. Bellows, D.D. 


James Beatty. 


Rev. Samuel Osgood. 


P. A. Curtis. 


William Berrian. 


F. H. Delano. 


B. F. Wheelwright. 


Robt. C. Woodbine. 


B. G. Arnold. 


Mrs. Kirkland. 


George Newbold. 


Mrs. Oscar Coles. 


Mrs. G. 


Warren. 


BROO 


KLYN. 


Mrs. Atkins. 


Mrs. A. Claflin. 


Mrs. L. B. Wyman. 


Mrs. Smith. 


Mrs. Eastman. 


Mrs. Ives. 


Mrs. Ludlow Thomas. 


Mrs. Sanger. 


Mrs. J. R. Gilmore. 


Mrs. John Sneden. 


Mrs. W. Halsey. 


Mrs. J. Cleveland. 


Mrs. C. Smith. 


Airs. McMurray. 


Mrs. A. H. Partridge. 


Mrs. L. Tappan. 


Abbie L. Blake. 


Mrs. J. T. Moore. 


Mrs. H. Blake. 


Mrs. James Humphrey 


Mrs. Ibbotson. 


Mrs. Waring. 


Mrs. Lefferts. 


Mrs. Wyckoff. 


Mrs. J. C. Dodge. 


Miss Newbold. 


Mrs. Haviland. 


Mrs. Young. 


Mrs. E. J. Lowber. 


Mrs. Bronson. 


Mrs. Bainbridge. 


Mrs. Ryder. 


Rev. Samuel Longfellow. 


Mrs. D. A. Kellogg. 


A. B. Sheldon. 


Mrs. Lamont. 


Rev. Frederick A. Farley. 


Mrs. H. M. Butler. 


T. L. Mason. 


Mrs. Gray. 



DRAMATIS PERSONS. 



Naomi, 


Widow of Elimelech, an Israelite ot 




Bethlehem-judah. 


Orpah, 
Ruth, 


Widow of Chilion, ) „ r „,. , , 
„_., rw tl [• Sons of Ehmelech. 
\\ idow of Mahlon, ) 


Rachel, 


A Bethlehemite, an old friend of Naomi. 


Boaz, 


A wealthy man of Bethlehem, a kins- 




man of Elimelech. 


Elkanah, 


An old man, a nearer kinsman than 




Boaz. 


Aminadab, 


Son of Rachel and a reaper in the 




fields of Boaz. 




Elders of Bethlehem. 




Female Singers, etc. 



RUTH: A DRAMA 



Scene i . — An Apartment in Moab. 
Presetit : Naomi and Orpah. 

Orpah. — Mother, be comforted ! 

Naomi. — Console me not, my daughter; grief like 
mine, 
If 't were to be impeded in its course 
Or pent within my breast, would burst a heart 
That's but too full already. Sympathy's the balm 
Of which I stand in need ; say, where is Ruth ? 
Bring her to me and we will weep together. 

[Orpah goes. 
How cold a word is comfort to a heart 
Just bleeding under fresh calamities ; 
And oh ! compared to it, what luxury is sorrow ! 
Yet, great Dispenser both of good and evil, 
It is not fretful murmurings and repinings 
In which I would, in which I dare indulge. 
Oh ! be it far from me, a worm like me, 
Presumptuously to question the decrees 
1 



RUTH : A DRAMA. 

Of thy unerring wisdom. Thou didst bless me 
With a kind husband and two duteous sons ; 
Oh ! then my cup of happiness was full, 
Was full to overflowing — then our dwelling 
Was as the fatness of the earth refreshed by dew 

from heaven. 
Ah ! happy, happy time passed in the bosom 
Of my family, and with my own dear nation. 
But 't is gone, for ever gone ! 
All my misfortunes began with thine, my country, 
Oh that with thine they might have had an end J 
Vain wish, and worse than vain, the Lord who 

gave me 
The blessings I enjoyed, had he not then a right 
To take them from me ? When he bestowed them, 
'T was not for my deserts ; when he withheld them, 
He still in mercy left me more, more, much more 
Than I for sin was worthy. 
The God of Israel for some wise purpose 
Sent forth a grievous famine through the land 
Of His own chosen people, many of whom 
Were forced by dire distress to quit their native 

homes 
And seek their bread among their wealthier neigh- 
bors. 
I and my family, among the rest, with sorrowing 
hearts 



RUTH : A DRAMA. 7 

Bade a long, sad farewell to Bethlehem, 

Our dear and happy home ; and having heard 

That corn was plentiful throughout the land of 
Moab, 

Directed thither our slow and heavy steps, 

While many a prayer we offered up to heaven 

For mercy, for ourselves, and for our country ; 

Mercy, that noble attribute of God, 

Was not withholden from our ardent cries. 

The Moabites received us kindly and supplied our 
wants. 

Cheered and encouraged, we with lighter hearts 

And brighter hopes industriously labored. 

Soon again peace filled our minds 

And plenty crowned our board. 

But ah ! a greater, a severer trial than poverty or 
exile 

Soon was doomed me. I lost my friend, sup- 
porter, comforter; 

My guide, my partner, both in joy and grief, 

My husband, my Elimelech. 

His death was worthy of his virtuous life ; 

O God ! preserve my children ; O support my wife, 
he cried ; 

Then sinking back exhausted, scarcely seemed to 
breathe. 

In dread suspense I watched his pallid face, 



RUTH : A DRAMA. 

And wiped the death cold drops that gathered 
round his brow. 

Awhile he lay quite motionless, then faintly whis- 
pered, 

My beloved Naomi, God is the father of the 
fatherless 

And husband of the widow — this thought, this 
firm belief 

Dispels all fear and makes a death-bed happy. 

Yes, I die, Naomi, but, O my dear one, 

A little while, and we again shall meet 

Where death shall never more divide us ; 

Till then, farewell — he ceased. 

Without a sigh his spirit winged its flight 

To Abraham's bosom and to Israel's God. 

My sons, when they arrived at man's estate, 

Selected wives, idolatrous Moab's daughters. 

Ah, then indeed I felt my great misfortune, 

In being exiled from my native country, 

In all its genuine bitterness. 

Mahlon espoused Ruth and Chilion Orpah ; 

But blind and needless were my anxious fears 

Lest my dear children should renounce the faith 

In which they had so carefully been nurtured. 

Wise would it be in us, the frail weak creatures 

Of an omnipotent, omnicient God, 

To trust all matters, all events to our Divine 
Creator, 



RUTH : A DRAMA. 9 

Since all things shall work together 
For the good of them who love and honor him. 
Orpah and Ruth both outwardly conformed 
To the religion of their honored lords ; 
Orpah, I fear, but outwardly conformed ; 
Ruth, I had hoped, was inwardly impressed 
With those blest principles which seemed 
To influence and mark her actions. 
Alas! poor Ruth! who now with tender love 
Will guide, encourage, and direct thy steps 
Toward saving knowledge and eternal truth, 
Since my last hope on earth, thy Mahlon, is no 

more? 
Chilion first followed his beloved sire, 
Then ere I had recovered from that stroke 
Mahlon too died — my earthly ties are broken. 

[Ruth enters ; they rush into each 
others arms and weep. 
Ruth. — Dear mother ! 
Naomi. — Dear Ruth ! 

[Ruth leads her to a seat, and sits 
down by her; they remain some 
minutes without speaking. 
R uth. — I hope you feel relieved, dear mother ? 
Naomi. — Yes, my Ruth, I do ; these tears relieve me. 
Never since my last dread shock 
These eyes had shed one tear; ah, my child, 
1* 



IO RUTH : A DRAMA. 

How am I stricken ; all who blessed me 
Beneath this lower sky have soared beyond it 
And left this world a desert. Had I the means, 
My daughter, of keeping thee now, my only com- 
fort, 
To soothe and solace my declining years ; 
But no, it is impossible ; return thou and thy sister 
To thy father's house, whilst I will bend 
My feeble steps back to my native country, 
There to claim from generous pity 
The little nature craves. 

Ruth. — And canst thou bid me leave thee ? 

Or dost thou think so meanly of poor Ruth 
As that she would forsake the aged mother 
Of her sainted Mahlon ? and did a thought 
So base find entrance in my heart — 
To seek my parent's dwelling would be vain 
Without renouncing Mahlon's pure religion. 
No ! I will never leave thee while these hands 
Can minister to thy necessities. 

[Enter Orpah. 

Naomi. — Thou comest opportunely, Orpah ; 

I was just disclosing the plan which I have formed 
Of going back to my beloved country. 
I have heard how that the Lord hath visited 
His people, recalled his exiled chosen to their 
Canaan. 



RUTH : A DRAMA. I I 

And again hath blessed their victuals with increase, 
And satisfied their poor with bread. 
I am old and feeble, and what I want their charity 
Will give till death releases me from all my woes. 

Orpah. — Surely, mother, we will go also with thee. 

Naomi. — No, my child, why would you go ? 
Why waste the morning of your lives 
On one who soon must drop into the grave 
And leave you in a land of strangers 
Without a friend or home ? No ! nature calls you 
To a happier duty. You yet are young 
And may form other ties, which death I hope 
Will not so prematurely dissolve like those of late. 
I have no other sons; alas, my children, 
I grieve on your account ; the Lord hath stretched 
Forth his hand against me. 

Orpah. —Mother, since youdesire it, I will leave you; 
But never, never shall I cease to think 
Of all the love and kindness you have shown me. 
Farewell ! and may the God in whom you trust 
Always preserve you. 

Naomi. — Farewell, my daughter, and may the same 
Jehovah 
Deal graciously with thee, as thou didst ever 
Wiih Chilion and with me. 

Orpah. — Farewell, dear Ruth! 

Ruth. — Farewell, Orpah ! the God of Israel bless thee. 



1 2 RUTH : A DRAMA. 

Naomi. — Thou see'st, dear Ruth, I have prevailed on 
Orpah ; 

Do thou go also ; let no fear on my account deter 
thee; 

Be assured my God will guide me safely. 
Ruth. — He can, he will, yet hear my firm resolve : 

Where thou goest I will also go ; 

Where thou lodgest I will also lodge; 

Where thou diest / will also die ; 

Thy people I will love as mine ; 

And thy God serve as my God. 



Scene 2. — The road to Bethlehem. Naomi, supported 
by Ruth, is met by an aged female, who gazes earnestly 
at her and exclaims : 

Rachel. — Is this, can this be Naomi ? 

Naomi. — Oh ! call me not Naomi,* call me Mara.t 
Ah ! seest thou not how bitterly the Lord 
Hath dealt with me ? when I departed hence 
My God had richly blessed me ; I went out full, 
But am returning empty. 

Rachel. — Welcome, thrice welcome, to the heart of 
Rachel 



* Naomi, in Hebrew, signifies happiness, 
t Mara, sorrow. 



ruth: a drama. 13 

Thou art and ever wilt be. Alas ! I see too well 

Thy altered fortune plainly depicted 

In thy grief-worn countenance ; 

I also have a tale of woe to tell. 
Naomi. — Dear Rachel, are we both then sisters in 
calamity ? 

Time has indeed so altered your appearance 

That even Naomi, your old friend and com- 
panion, 

Can scarcely recognize you. 
Rachel. — My dearest Naomi, I fear to ask — Elime- 

lech ; your sons ? 
Naomi. — Are all, I trust, in heaven, my Rachel. 
Rachel. — Ah ! would we also were ; —there is, there 
must be, 

A happier Canaan than our promised land. 

But say, my sister, on whose support thou leanest ? 

Thou hadst, I think, no daughter. 
Naomi.— I had not, Rachel; but no child could ever 

Be more dutiful than Ruth has been to me ! 

And, in return, she is indeed the daughter 

Of my love. She was once the wife, 

The happy wife, of my beloved Mahlon, 

And since the hour that took away my son 

She has assiduously striven to comfort his poor 
mother, 

Though I know her own heart was nigh breaking. 



14 RUTH I A DRAMA. 

Rachel. — Daughter of Moab ! know the prayers and 
blessings 

Of age and of misfortune ; the God of Israel 
hears ; 

He will reward thee richly. 
Naomi. — But tell me, Rachel, in this our toilsome 

Pilgrimage, what trials have been thine? 
Rachel. — Ah, Naomi! severe and deep ones, not alone 

Pain, or disease, or poverty, or death, but worse, 

Far worse than these, than all— unkindness 

And ingratitude from those whom I best loved. 

But my dear old friend, the night is fast approach- 
ing 

Let us haste, ere darkness close around us ; 

This night at least you both shall pass with me, 

And both shall share the widow's cake and cruse. 

I have one son, my greatest earthly blessing ; he, 
I know, 

Will be rejoiced to see his mother's valued friend, 

Come, let us hasten hither. 
Naomi. - Oh, Rachel ! from my heart I thank thee 
for thy kindness, 

And joyfully accept it, for I feel I greatly need 
repose. 

My body is fatigued, and O my mind 

Is quite bewildered with the recollections 

Which rush upon my soul ! 



RUTH : A DRAMA. 1 5 

Ah, Bethlehem ! Bethlehem ! since I last beheld 

thee, 
What misery I have known ! Yet to be permitted 
To come and lay my aged bones within thee 
Calls for my deepest gratitude ; 
But O, Elimelech — my children — my dear child- 
ren. 
Rachel. — They, they are blessed. 
Naomi. — Yes ! my God I thank thee. Dear Rachel 
lead me in. 



Scene 3 — Harvest. 

A Field : Ruth gleaning after the reapers. 

[Enter Boaz. 
Boaz {to the reapers'). 

The God of Harvest bless this fruitful field 
And bless the laborers in it ! 
First Reaper (Aminadab). — And may he bless our 
master 
As he doth bless his servants. 
Boaz [to 1st Reaper). — Who is yon lovely damsel ? 
First Reaper. — My lord, she is a Moabite, and hither 
came 
With the poor old Naomi, who has just returned 



1 6 RUTH : A DRAMA. 

From sojourning in Moab, where she lost 

Elimelech her husband, and her sons. 

Ruth, the damsel s name, was wife to Mahlon, 

Naomi's eldest son, and when her husband 

Died, and left his widowed mother old, poor, 

And helpless, this exemplary woman 

At once resolved to cherish and console her, 

Forsook her native land, and journeyed with 

Her here, where now she strives by gleaning 

To support her. My mother and Naomi 

In early youth were friends ; and Ruth and she 

Abide with us until they can procure a better 

home. 
Boaz. — Oh, matchless force of conjugal affection ! 
Which even death has not had power to conquer. 
Oh, virtuous Ruth ; and fair as thou art virtuous ! 
A Moabite, thou mayest put to shame 
Israel's most favored daughters ! 
For thee, Aminadab, thou and thy mother 
Doubt not wilt receive a blessing from on high 
For succoring the aged and the widow. 
I now must do my part, and oh, how sweet the 

duty ! 
The strangers shall not want a friend 
Whilst I have power to help them. 
Meanwhile let them remain with you 
Until I can resolve how best to serve them. 



RUTH : A DRAMA. 7 

Let the damsel glean and gather freely, 
And rebuke her not ; and charge my reapers 
That they treat her kindly as they hope 
To gain their master's favor. 
If she be wearied with the toil and heat, 
Do thou assist her and see that she partake 
Of the repast at noon. 

[Boaz walks to another part of the 
field and addresses Ruth. 
Boaz. — Blessed be thou my daughter ! go not hence, 
But tarry with my maidens ; 
Take what thou wilt, and fear not a reproach. 
The reapers I have charged to treat thee kindly 
And at mid-day go and partake their meal. 
Ruth. — Oh, my lord, how shall I find words to thank 
you 
For all this goodness to a friendless stranger ? 
Boaz. — No thanks are due to me, I but perform my 
duty. 
The God of Israel, that God under whose wings 
Thou now hast come to trust, commands us 
To assist the stranger and the widow; but, my 

daughter, 
I have heard of all thy filial duty to Naomi, 
How for her sake thou hast renounced thy country 
And come into a land where thou wast quite un- 
known. 
2 



1 8 RUTH : A DRAMA. 



My heart now pays its tribute to such virtue 
And eagerly it prompts what duty offers. 

Ruth. — My lord, what I have done deserves no 
praise. 
I have no merit which can claim this kindness ; 
But gratitude to you, and to that God, 
To whose interposition I alone can owe the favor 
Thou hast shown me, will, I trust, prove 
I was not unworthy. The God of Israel has long 
Been my God ; and his precepts, pure and holy, 
As he is holy, declare he is the true God. 
Oh that Moab would cease to worship Baal ! 
My heart bleeds for my country — shudders 
To behold its blindness and idolatry. 
But, alas ! how can the God of Israel hear the 

prayers 
Of one whose youth to idols was devoted ? 
Else how, my country, would I pray for thee ! 

Boaz. — Daughter, the God of Israel is just as well as 
holy, 
And merciful as just. Though thy youth 
Has been indeed devoted to idolatry, . 
Thou worshipped in ignorance; 
And, having done so, fear not that that just being 
(Who is himself alone the source of knowledge) 
Will e'er condemn thy ignorance as sin. 
When light was given thee thou didst then 



RUTH: A DRAMA. 1 9 

Embrace it; fear not, the mercy that has led thee 
Hither will not refuse to listen to thy prayers. 
Boaz {alone). » 

What piety, simplicity, yet high-souled virtue 

This Moabite displays ! What modest dignity 

The inward consciousness of rectitude imparts 

To all her thoughts, and words, and actions ; 

What beauty, too, regardlessly possess'd ! 

Yes, lovely as she is, a mind like hers 

Possesses too much value in itself 

To cast a thought upon the form it animates. 

How am I to act ? the law of Israel 

Would give this young and lovely Moabite 

To age and to moroseness ; the nearest kinsman 

of her husband Mahlon 
Is old, stern, and ill-favored ; yet he is rich 
And powerful ; and am not I as rich ! 
As powerful ! and younger far than he is ? 
Yet 'tis my duty, and I will perform it, 
To tell him of the treasure in his reach. 
He may indeed refuse it, for to him 
The Moabitish Ruth may not be pleasing, 
And then, oh then, she is my own. 
I am her next of kin ; yet shall I owe to duty 
What I would owe to love ? No, 
I will see her kinsman, and if, as I desire, 
He should renounce her, I will endeavor 



20 RUTH : A DRAMA. 

To gain her heart ; and if, alas ! I fail, 

I will then purchase the land that was Elimelech's 

And restore it to her and to Naomi, 

Free and without conditions, and never 

Shall she know the claim which I possess'd, 

Or sacrifice I make. If her affections 

Cannot be mine, my love is too sincere 

To force her to be so against her own consent. 

Ah, surely our all-righteous Judge, 

Our Law-giver divine, is far too just 

Ever to have design'd to authorize compulsion. 

[Exit Boaz. 



Scene 4. — The road to the city of Bethlehem from the 
fields of Boaz. Ruth appears with the gleanings 
over her shoulder. Aminadab, the son of Rachel, 
awaiting her approach. 

AMINADAB. 

Why tarriest thou ? the day is waning fast 
Thou virtuous daughter of a foreign land, 
Oh let me bear thy burden — sweet the laboi 

[takes her bimdle of gleanings. 
When 'tis for thee I bear the fragrant load. 
Why thou hast labored hard ; thou hast at least 
An ephah of fine barley in thy sling. 



RUTH : A DRAMA. 2T 



RUTH. 

I had not gleaned the half of what thou see'st 
But for the kindness of the generous Boaz, 
Who bade his reapers strew the golden sheaves 
Right in my path, as if 'twere accidental. 
I heard him as I stopped behind a mow, 
And bless'd him in my heart for his true goodness. 

AMINADAB. 

Oh, Ruth ! no longer stoop to these mean labors, 
But as my dear and cherish'd wife remain 
At home with thy dear mother and my own, 
And make our fireside happy. 

RUTH. 

Ah, no ! Aminadab, my heart lies buried 
In the cold tomb of my beloved Mahlon. 
I love thee as a brother ; feel the kindness 
Thou and thy mother show'st to me and mine, 
And the sweet pity which would take a stranger, 
A desolate widow, to thy house and home. 
But never can my heart respond to aught 
But what's connected with my sainted Mahlon. 
For that I followed his dear mother here ; 
And while I minister to her I feel 
I still have something left my husband honor'd 
2* 



RUTH : A DRAMA 

For that I sought the God myMahlon worship'd, 
And left my country and its senseless idols. 
No, no, Aminadab, seek out a virgin 
Whose first pure love and heart may be thine own> 
Then shall she cling to thee with such devotion 
As clings poor Ruth to Mahlon's sainted shade. 

AMINADAB. 

Oh ! say not so, dear Ruth ; no after love 
Can this poor heart, this faithful bosom move. 
Thee, it's first star of hope, its dream of joy 
No future vision can its beams destroy. 



Scene 5. — The barn-yard of the dwelling of Rachel. 

Present: Ruth, Naomi and Aminadab. The latter, 
laying down Ruth's gleaning before Naomi, retires into 
the cottage. 

NAOMI. 

Dear daughter, prop of my declining age, 
Thou'rt kindly welcome to Naomi's sight; 
Sole remnant of the dear familiar faces 
Which smiled sweet love and peace in days gone 

by. 
Where didst thou glean, my daughter ? In 



RUTH : A DRAMA. 23 

Whose fields hast thou pursued thy hard 
But pious labors to support the poor 
Dependent on thy duteous love ? Surely 
Some Israelite, whom Moses' spirit has 
Moved to care for the widow and the 
Stranger, must have increas'd thy store. 

RUTH. 

Yes ! mother, yes ! It was my hap to labor 
-In the smiling fields of a rich man 
Named Boaz; and whilst I carefully 
Pick'd up the scatter'd sheaves, he chanced 
To walk forth in the morning air 
To view the laborers gather in his harvest. 
With what a graceful step and noble mien, 
Such as they say Prince Abraham wore of old, 
He moved and spoke. His eagle glance 
Soon noted my foreign garb and accent, 
And he turn'd to our kind friend, Aminadab, 
To ask my name and country. When he 
Had told him all, he look'd upon me, 
And, with a beaming smile so like 
My sainted M anion's, laid his hand 
Upon my head and bless'd me 
In the name of Israel's God. 
He told me, too, never to quit his fields 
Nor to bring aught with me for my 



24 RUTH : A DRAMA. 

Reireshment, but to eat and drink 
With his young men and maidens 
Till the end of all his harvest. 

NAOMI. 

Tis well, my daughter. See they find thee not 

In any other field. 

Do thou his bidding, follow with his maidens 

Where'er their master setteth them to reap — 

He is a kinsman of the tribe of Judah. 

Our holy law gives thee a powerful claim 

On his protection. He loved thy husband, 

And before our exile showed us much kindness ; 

And blessed be he of the Lord his God, 

For shewing to the widow of his friend 

The kindness which the dead no longer needeth. 

The dreadful flood which made our smiling 

Fields a barren desert, and forced so many 

Families of Israel to seek subsistence 

For their starving flocks through the 

Surrounding countries, scarcely touched 

His higher lands. 

Since that time, like Abraham's, 

His possessions have increased, 

Till now he is reputed the most wealthy 

Of Judah's prosperous tribe. 



ruth: a drama. 25 

Scene 6. — TJie Gate or Court-house of the City of 
Bethlehem. 

Present : Ten Elders or Senators, forming a Quorum or 
legal court; Boaz and Elkanah, the two kinsmen 
of E lime lech ; Naomi and Ruth. 

Boaz. — Elders of Israel ! Senators of Bethlehem ! 
I have called you hither to claim your aid 
To enforce one of the laws which Moses gave our 

tribes. 
Elimelech of Bethlehem, a kinsman of my house, 
During the famine which ten years ago 
Laid waste our fruitful fields, 
Sought refuge in the land of Moab, 
Where he dwelt some time in peace and safety, 
There his sons, Mahlon and Chilion, took them 

Moab wives ; 
He died an exile in that distant land 
And both his sons died also. 

[Leadifig Naomi forward. 
His widow here I now present to you, 
Returned in her old age bereft of both 
Her husband and her sons, while all the land 
Which was Elimelech's and theirs, is now 
Annexed to that of their next kinsman. 
Naomi prays for her late husband's rights 
According to our just and sacred law ! 



26 RUTH : A DRAMA. 

Naomi. — My lords, I beg your kind and gracious aid. 

First Elder. — And thou shalt have it, thou 
afflicted woman ! 
Let the possessor of the lot pertaining 
To Elimelech of Bethlehem, be called. 

Elk an ah [coming forward). 
Behold him here. 

Elders ! my father Simeon held the lot 
Which was Elimelech's since that sad day 
When famine forc'd our kinsman from his home ; 
Then it was worthless ; Siddim's marshy vale, 
Where my poor kinsman's patrimony stood, 
Was subject to such storms at harvest time, 
When Jordan's stream o'erflows,* that all his fields 
Were inundated by the o'erwhelming flood, 
And he with all his family obliged to fly 
To Moab's nearest plains. Since my father's 

death 
Left me the charge of these impoverished fields, 
By ceaseless toil, by digging drains and building 

up 
Embankments to keep the sea from rushing o'er 
the land, 



* Jordan overfloweth all his banks all the time of harvest. — Joshua, c. iii. v. 1 $. 
The vale of Siddim, which is the salt sea. — Genesis, c. xiv. v. ?. 
This then was the lot of the tribe of Judah. Their south border was from 
the shore of the salt sea. — Joshua, c. xv. v. 1, 2. 



RUTH : A DRAMA. 27 

And making Jordan's stream a whelming flood 
To carry all before it, instead (as now it is) — 
A welcome irrigation— I have succeeded, 
With heaven's kind blessing on my humble labors, 
In making it one of the finest lots of Judah's 

beauteous land. 
I will redeem it at Naomi's hands for its full 

value, 
And will give her what will make her widow'd 

age 
Prosperous and even wealthy. 
Boaz. — Elkanah, thou wouldst thus indeed fulfill 
A part of Moses' law, but not the whole ! 
For Naomi has not returned alone, 
But was accompanied by Ruth of Moab, 
The virtuous widow of her oldest son. 
Ruth has renounced her country and its idols 
To seek Naomi's God, the God of Israel. 
Here she has toiled with sweet humility, 
Tho' there she might have dwelt in ease and 

splendor. 
Our law decrees that when a brother dies 
He who would hold his heritage, must take his 

widow, too, 
To be his lawful wife, and heirs be raised, 
To keep each lot in its appointed tribe. 
Wilt thou do this, Elkanah ? 



28 RUTH : A DRAMA. 



Elkanah. — No ! that I cannot do, 

Lest I should mar my own inheritance 

And bring disunion in my happy home. 

I honor Ruth's virtue and goodness, but 

I honor more my Hannah's long tried worth, 

My cherish'd wife, nor willingly would I 

Bring foreigners to rival the pure love 

I bear my children ! Boaz, thou art free ; 

Thou hast as yet, I think, no wife or children 

Whose jealousy this foreigner might raise ; 

I know thou lovest Ruth ! Think not Elkanah 

Will mar thy bliss; I heard thee when thou 

thoughtest 
No other ear but Israel's God's was listening ! 
" Old, tho' I am," and stern," as thou didst think 

me, 
I honor'd thy resolve to keep God's law, 
And give the nearest kinsman and possessor 
Of the inheritance the right of choice, 
Tho' it might break thine heart ! Like Abraham's, 
The sacrifice will not be needed ! 'Twas to try 

thy faith ; 
And thy loved Isaac, bound on heaven's high 

altar, 
Is now to be released and be thine own. 
She loves thee, too ; I know it by her sighs 
And tearful trembling, lest I should claim her ! 



RUTH : A DRAMA. 2Q 

Boaz, take thou my rights unto thyself! 
In true and solemn token that to thee 
I give up all inheritance and Ruth, 
I hereby draw my sandal from my foot 
And give it to thee and thy heirs forever. 

[Gives Boaz his shoe. 

Boaz [to the Elders and people). 

Elders and brethren, ye are witnesses 
That I have bought this day from Naomi 
All that pertaineth to her husband's house, 
Elimelechs, and Chilion's, and Mahlon's ; 
And Ruth, the Moabitess, have I bought 
To be my lawful wife, to raise the name 
Of her dead husband, Mahlon, in his place 
Among his brethren. 

The Elders and People — -We are witnesses. 

\Enter Chorus of women, led by Rachel. 

Sound the loud Timbrel in Bethlehem's gate, 
With Cymbals and Psalt'rys the tidings relate ; 
The Moabite daughter, whose virtue we praise, 
Has crown'd with her love our Naomi's last days. 



$0 RUTH : A DRAMA. 

Let the house of great Boaz receive thee with 

pride, 
Thou hast come to our nation with God for thy 

guide ; 
Seven sons to Naomi could never impart 
The joy thy affection has brought to her heart. 

From thee shall the true house of Israel rise; 
Thy sons shall be valiant, thy daughters be wise ; 
'Midst the princes of Judah their dwellings shall be, 
And the blessing of Jacob descend upon thee. 




STANZAS 

SUGGESTED BY A VIEW OF BOSTON FROM THE 
CUPOLA OF THE STATE HOUSE. 



From Albion's isle I come ; 

I was born on a foreign strand, 
Yet I love the Pilgrim's home, 

And am proud on this spot to stand. 

O, much did I long to see 

The scenes of their bright career — 
Of the good, the brave, the free — 

Of their toils and their triumphs here ! 

Canadian shores I've viewed ; 

I have sailed on St. Lawrence tide ; 
On Quebec's fair plains I've stood, 

Where our British hero died. 

But theirs was a brighter crown 

Than earth's highest honors yield — 

A victory harder won 

Than the fame of the proudest field. 



32 STANZAS. 

They scaled not the dangerous height 

Of a fort or a castle's brow, 
But they gained heaven's regions bright, 

By virtue's steps below. 

Their path was more dark and steep 
Than Wolfe's daring footsteps trod, 

But it led o'er the stormy deep, 
To freedom, and fame, and God. 

They fought not with bomb or shell, 

Artillery's dreadful rage, 
Yet Satan's empire fell, 

And with sin fierce war they wage. 

The sword of the Word of God 
They bore to a distant land ; 

Where no Christian's foot had trod 
They stood, a patriot band. 

Their country was not of earth — 
As pilgrims they lived and moved ; 

They rejoiced in their heavenly birth, 
And they spoke of the land they loved. 

They told the poor Indian, lost 
In ignorance dark as night, 

Of the price his redemption had cost — 
Of Jesus, and heaven, and light. 



STANZAS. $2> 

They taught him that Jesus' command 

Was that wars and contentions should cease ; 

That his symbol in every land 

Was the olive-branch, whispering peace. 

Americans ! ye who delight 

In the fame of these heroes of old, 

Beware how their precepts ye slight — 
More precious than silver and gold. 

Let freedom to worship your God, 

Let peace, by your fathers bequeathed, 

Your triumph at home and abroad, 

Round your star-spangled banner be wreathed ! 
3* 




MOUNT AUBURN. 



Sweet Auburn ! which with verdure and with bloom 
Adorn the precincts of the darksome tomb, 
Divests the grave of half its dread array, 
Plants living flowers upon the lifeless clay, 
Hallows the memory of the cherished dead, 
And turns to balmy dews the tears we shed, 
Accept a tribute from a stranger's pen, 
Meet resting-place of brave and pious men ! 

There marble monument and sculptured bust 
Seem to reanimate the silent dust, 
Give to each grave a voice, whose thrilling tone 
The sorrowing hearts of friends and kindred own ! 
Imagination revels in the scene, 
And fills with fancied forms each alley green — 
Hears Channing preach with eloquence divine — 
Spurzheim philosophy's wise precepts join ; 
Heroes address their friends in martial strains 
Tell them of Bunker Hill and battle-plains ; 
Others, who braved the dangers of the sea, 
To serve their country and preserve it free, 
The spangled banner o'er the waves unfurled, 
The naval bulwarks of the Western world, 



MOUNT AUBURN. 

Now safely landed on a peaceful shore, 
Where wars no longer rage, nor billows roar, 
Still hovering round, may angels wings expand, 
Be guardian spirits of their native land. 

But see where yonder little cherub lies, 
As if sweet sleep had gently closed her eyes ! 
One beauteous foot across the other thrown, 
Calm she reclines, in infant grace alone. 
While gazing on that face so sweet and mild 
The parents still may dream they have a child ; 
For she, alas ! so deeply cherished here, 
She was their only one, — thus doubly dear! 

Nor scorn we to appropriate a place 

To yonder emblem of the canine race ; 

But honored still for ages yet to come 

The faithful dog here guards his master's tomb ! 

In sculptured stone immortalized is he— 

A noble tribute to fidelity ! 

Beside the friends in life he loved to guard, 

In death he gains this justly earned reward. 

Bright resting-place of faithful hearts and true, 
Auburn ! New England's pride and boast, adieu ! 



35 



ON THE STORMY PETREL. 

CALLED BY SAILORS MOTHER CAREY'S CHICKENS. 



Bird of untiring wing, 
Whence dost thou come ? 

Bird of deep mystery, 
Where is thy home ? 

On the broad ocean wave 

How canst thou rest ? 
Where dost thou roost at night ? 

Where build thy nest ? 

Land is too far from thee 

On every side, 
Thousands of miles away 

Over the tide. 

Yet dost thou carelessly 

Sport o'er the wave, 
Fearless of finding 

A watery grave ! 



ON THE STORMY PETREL. 37 

When the storm rages, 

And tempests beat high, 
Still on the crests 

Of the billows you fly ; 

Sportively, joyously, 

Dart through the foam, 
Still seem delighted 

O'er ocean to roam. 

Bird of three elements, 

Air, water, earth, 
Where dost thou rear thy young ? 

Where hail their birth ? 

Is it on some lonely 

Rock in the sea, 
Where human hand or foot 

Never may be ? 

Dost thou from such lone spot 

Launch o'er the flood, 
Bringing along with thee 

Thy youthful brood? 

Over the deep, deep sea, 

Like thee to fly, 
Like thee to bring their young, 

Flutter — and die ? 



38 ON THE STORMY PETREL. 

Bird of existence brief, 

Man is like thee, 
Launching, he knows not where, 

O'er a wide sea; 

Tossed on the billows 
Of life's stormy wave, 

Restless as thou, 

Till he sinks in the grave ; 

But not like thee, poof bird, 

Never to rise ! 
Soon on the wings 

Of the spirit he flies — 

Soars through eternal space, 
Ransomed and blest — 

Mounts to heaven's utmost height ! 
There is his rest. 




ON THE DEPARTURE OF A CLERGYMAN 

FOR EUROPE FOR THE BENEFIT 

OF HIS HEALTH. 



Go ! beloved pastor, go ! 

On thy steps may angels wait, 
Guardians of God's saints below, 

May they watch thy future fate. 

Whilst o'er ocean's billowy breast 
Thy trans-Atlantic wanderings lead, 

Oh ! may they lull each storm to rest 
And bid thy vessel safely speed. 

Oh ! may they waft refreshing gales, 

With strengthening power from spray and foam 
As on her course she calmly sails, 

And seeks my much loved English home. 

But more than all, may gales of peace 

From Heaven's own shores thy bosom fill, 

The graces of thy soul increase, 
Thy power to do a Saviour's will ! 



4-0 ON THE DEPARTURE OF A CLERGYMAN. 

First stretched along broad Mersey's stream 
My native town will meet thy view, 

Of England's merchant cities, queen — 
What noble docks, what shipping too ! 

What thousands crowd her busy quays 
And anxious scan each stranger's face, 

With curious scrutinizing gaze, 

The features of some friend to trace. 

While smiling at the busy scene, 
Across the water " Cheshire " lies, 

Her waving fields, her lawns so green, 
Extend 'till " Cambria's " mountains rise. 

My country ! Oh ! my feelings warm 
As thus I trace each well-known spot — 

Unworthy of a human form 

Is that cold heart which loves thee not 

Tho' in this world of chance and change 
Those shores I never more may see, 

Yet in unfettered fancy's range, 
My honor'd friend, I go with thee. 

Again I view the cloistered pile 
Within fair Cestria's* ancient walls 

I tread the venerable aisle, 

And plainly on my ear there falls 



Ccstria," the ancient name for Chester. 



ON THE DEPARTURE OF A CLERGYMAN. 4 1 

The silvery chimes of sweet-toned bells,* 
Along bright Deva'sf " Wizard stream," 

Whose echo of that period tell 

When life was yet a beauteous dream ! 

Tho' I may never trace again 

The relics of " the Saxon age," 
The towers o'erlooking moor and glen 

Where kings beheld their troops engage,! 

Yet thou wilt view the symbols fair 
Of England's dawn and earlier day, 

Wilt gaze on Cestria's walls so rare, 
And in her antique temples pray. 

Farewell ! May health and peace be thine, 
And temperate climes thy sinews braCe ; 

Thy flock for thy return will pine, 
And all thy wanderings fondly trace. 

* The bells of old St. John's Church, by the river side, are famous for their 
sweet silvery tones. 

f " Deva," the ancient name of the river Dee. 

X An old tower on the walls of Chester bears this inscription : " King Charles 
stood on this tower and saw his armies defeated on Rowton Moor." 



ON THE DEATH OF HENRY CLAY. 



Yes ! Clay's bright course on earth is o'er 
And " Ashland's Sage" is gone! 
The dear old Patriarch is no more ! 
Mourn ! sons of freedom, mourn ! 

Dear, patient sufferer ! Thou didst long 
Await thy heavenly change ; 
Now out of weakness thou'rt made strong, 
Through brighter worlds to range. 

He's gone to celebrate above 

His country's festal day j 

Oh ! while that country's name ye love 

Remember Henry Clay ! 

For half a century's rolling years 

His talents were her pride ; 

When threat'ning clouds alarmed her fears, 

His counsels aid applied. 

He loved her with the purest love 
A Patriot's bosom knows, 
But all mankind his feelings moved, 
For all that bosom glows ! 



ON THE DEATH OF HENRY CLAY. 43 

Poor Afric's sons to him were dear, 
And sympathy could wake, 
And all his eloquence appear 
For fallen Grecia's sake. 

Virginia's " Mill Boy," thou didst soon 
Thy true position claim ! 
Thy talents gain'd a brilliant noon, 
Thyself a noble name ! 

Thy youthful sun, through fogs and clouds, 
Arose with glittering light, 
Dispersed the shades thy dawn enshrouds, 
With intellectual might. 

That name shall ever brightly shine 
In History's glowing page, 
With Washington shall proudly twine 
The glories of their age ! 




ON THE MISSION TO INDIA.* 



I stood amongst a listening crowd 
Upon New England's hallow'd sod, 
And whilst each head devoutly bow'd, 
Before their Pilgrim Fathers' God, 
I thought perchance their spirits near 
Might hover o'er the sacred scene, 
Rejoic'd to view the sheaves appear 
Where their " seed-scattering steps " had been. 

But who, but He who form'd the world, 
And blesses those who sow in tears, 
Who saw their flut'ring sail unfurl'd 
With simple faith, but inward fears, 
Who guided that lone " Mayflower's " track 
To Massachusetts' shelt'ring Bay, 
Who warded off each fierce attack, 
From savage Indians, bent to slay ! 

Who fed and watched his little flock 
In this dread wilderness afar! 

* These lines were suggested by the farewell meeting in Park Street Church, 
Boston, on the occasion of the departure of the Rev. Dr. Scudder, Rev. Mr. 
Spaulding, etc., for Southern India, 



ON THE MISSION TO INDIA. 45 

O ! who but " He," Salvation's Rock, 
The Christian Pilgrim's guiding star, 
Could ever dream that scenes like this 
Would be the product of their toil ! 
To send forth harbingers of bliss 
To distant India's burning soil. 

Yet such it was ! proud sceptic cease ! 
And doubt God's promises no more ! 
The Gospel of the " Prince of Peace " 
Is borne from this to India's shore ! 
The little persecuted band, 
The grain of mustard seed, so small — 
Is now a tree, and fills the land, 
And spreads its boughs to shelter all ! 

Aye ! stretches o'er the distant main, 
To grasp the world in its embrace, 
To break sin's harsh and galling chain, 
Where e'er it binds the human race ! 
Aye ! soon shall every link be riv'n, 
Forg'd by the powers of Hell combin'd ! 
To keep the fetter'd soul from Heav'n 
And captive hold the human mind ! 

Think ye to see a Saviour come 

With shining hosts reveal'd from Heav n ? 

4* 



46 ON THE MISSION TO INDIA. 

Not so, vain man ! let pride be dumb, 
Not such the symbols Christ has giv'n ! 
The " Leaven," the mustard seed so small, 
The power of truth, the power of grace, 
Soon shall the world before it fall, 
And Satan's lying dreams give place. 

Mahomet feels his kingdom shake, 
Nor dares (as once) the sword to wave 
In Christian blood, his thirst to slake, 
And doom the " Heretic " a grave ! 
" Brahma " now totters on his throne, 
Tho' victims still his course attend, 
And the poor " Suttee's " piercing groan, 
In flames and blood to Heav'n ascend. 

China receives her Missions too, 
Within her regions vast and broad, 
And Ephraim, the backsliding Jew, 
Shall soon stretch out his hands to God ; 
Then — then Messiah's reign shall come, 
The knowledge of the Lord shall be 
Spread o'er the earth 'till Nature's doom, 
As spreads from pole to pole, the sea. 



THE FOLLOWING LINES 

WERE CALLED FORTH BY AN INCIDENT CONNECTED 
WITH THE BAPTISM OF TWENTY-TWO CONVERTS IN 
THE BEDFORD AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH, BROOKLYN. 
THE PRESENTATION OF A BIBLE TO A YOUNG LADY 
BY THE PASTOR AFTER HER BAPTISM, AS A BEQUEST 
FROM HER FATHER, LATELY DECEASED. 



The pool of Bethesda's bright waters are flowing, 
Oh come all ye sick and be plunged in the wave, 
The " Master of Life " is rich blessings bestowing, 
He waits in his temples almighty to save. 

When earth was a void, and thick darkness en- 
shrouded 
The space which God's voice was to call into light, 
The Spirit of God moved in brightness unclouded 
O'er the face of the waters and banished the night. 

And now like a flood the same Spirit is rushing ; 
Breaks down the dark barriers of doubt and of sin ; 
From hearts, hard as iron, the tear drops are gushing, 
And group after group at God's altars step in. 



48 LINES. 

Some seek for His grace in the baptismal waters, 
" Like Peter " would lave " both their hands and 

their head." 
Blest followers of Jesus ! on these sons and daughters, 
Be the gifts of the Spirit abundantly shed ! 

On one young disciple, whose sire had departed 
But a few days before to the mansions above, 
Did that parent bequeath to his child broken-hearted, 
A precious memorial of fatherly love. 

Oh take (said this dear dying saint to his pastor) 

This Bible and give it, when I am gone home, 

To my child, when in following our Heavenly 

Master 
Through the baptismal waters she safely has come. 

Oh ! tell her that book was the guide of my life, 
That in Death's chilling waters it comforts my heart ; 
May it cheer and support her through nature's short 

strife, 
And bear her to heaven when she too shall depart ! 

Oh ! may this bright season of soul-felt motion, 

Be but the fair dawn of a still brighter day, 

When the knowledge of God spreads from ocean to 

ocean, 
And Millennium glories Christ's churches display. 



LINES 

ON AN ACCIDENT IN PRINCE'S BAY, OFF STATEN 
ISLAND, AUGUST 12, 1870. 



I stood amidst a solemn crowd 

In Tottenville's sweet rural shrine ; 

The organ peal'd a dirge aloud ; 

Each eye was dimm'd, each head was bow'd ; 

The stricken mourners shrieked aloud, 

Not wails for one, but three combined ; 

Three fair young forms before us lie — 

At once their spirits sought the sky ! 

One lovely girl, just budding fair, 
Her mother's darling, father's pride : 
A son, as cherish'd too, is there ! 
His manly beauty may compare 
With her's, and good as he is fair, 
Beauteous in death he lies beside ; 
His little brother's face is hid 
Beneath the cold dark coffin's lid! 

How died the three ? Beneath the wave 
They sank, with hands and arms entwined ; 



5° LINES. 

Their boat upset, none there to save 
Too close the clasp the tremblers gave : 
They rose not from their watery grave, 
But one poor girl was left behind ; 
She saw them sink, she shrieked for aid ; 
Oh ! why was it so long delay'd ? 

Alas! poor sister! mother! sire! 
Two households plung'd in life-long grief ! 
God, help the mourners ! lift them higher 
Above earth's woes : let faith aspire 
And give these sad ones sweet relief; 
List to those voices midst the choir 
Of angels 'round the throne above, 
United in eternal love ! 




ON THE ASSASSINATION OF PRESIDENT 
LINCOLN, 

APRIL 14, 1865. 



Why, Lincoln, was there no protecting shield, 
No guardian angel to avert thy doom ? 
That to foul treason thou thy life shouldst yield ? 
A base assassin hurl thee to the tomb ! 

Just when bright " Victory " hovered o'er thy head, 
And " white-robed Peace " proclaimed her advent 

nigh, 
War's horrors drew not forth such tears we shed, 
Such bitter tears, that thus our chief should die ! 

Oh ! mourn Columbia, o'er thy tarnished name, 
Where Freedom arm'd the Traitor's hand vrithpower 
With one base stroke to sully thy pure fame ; 
Thy fair Republic's most triumphant hour ! 

Four years, this day, the Stars and Stripes were 

lowered 
From Sumpter's towers before a rebel host ; 
This glorious day, with joy they were restored 
To the proud eminence which then they lost. 



52 ON ASSASSINATION OF PRESIDENT LINCOLN. 

But as ordained to check all " human pride," 
To show the vanity of all below, 
Our cup of happiness is dashed aside — 
We lose our hero by a dastard's blow. 

That heaven-born man, Columbia's pride and boast, 
Next to our Washington, her noblest son 
That upright, honest man — himself a host — 
Slav'rys stern foe, and Freedom's friend is gone ! 

Yes, he is gone ! but to his country leaves 
A noble heritage, a deathless name ; 
And now in heaven a golden crown receives, 
Far, far above earth's highest meed of fame. 

Nor do we mourn as those of hope bereft ; 
Tho' our Elijah has been called on high, 
His spirit lives — his mantle has been left, 
His memory and his cause shall never die. 




ON PROFESSOR LOWE'S BALLOON ASCEN- 
SION NEAR RICHMOND, TO OVER- 
LOOK THE REBEL FORCES. 



In olden times when heavenly light 
Was veiled from mortal eyes, 
And he who caught a straggling ray 
Was classed with deities. 

When blind and erring man believed 
In sorceries' witching power, 
And bowed to gods of wood and stone 
In sorrow's darkened hour. 

Balak, the King of Moab, sent 
To Midian's distant land, 
To summon Balaam to his aid 
To curse God's chosen band. 

From Moab's high commanding hills 
The Eastern Prophet gazed, 
On Jacob's tents and Israel's host, 
With awe divine amazed. 
5 



54 ON PROFESSOR LOWE'S BALLOON ASCENSION. 

Enchantments could not dim the view 
From his unwilling eyes ; 
His mental orbs saw Moab's fall, 
And Israel's sceptre rise. 

But what were Moab's rocks and hills, 
To that astounding height 
Where human science now can rise 
And view Earth's warriors fight ? 

Above the clouds man now can soar, 
Leave mountains far below, 
And view but as a silvery line 
The broadest rivers flow. 

Lowe floats sublimely poised in air 
O'er Richmond's fated towers ; 
Oh, may he see the star of peace 
Above the storm that lowers. 

Not far removed in heavenly space, 
But fast approaching near, 
When Freedom's flag shall proudly float 
O'er this broad hemisphere. 



ON THE DEATH OF MY MOTHER. 



My gourd is withered ! — she is gone 

Who most could wake my hopes and fears, 

Of all beloved the dearest one, 
The dearest from my earliest years. 

My mother ! O, on that loved name 
How oft will fond remembrance dwell ! 

Earth ne'er can know a tenderer claim — 
A mother's fondness who can tell ? 

With what a sweet, seraphic smile 

Her mild, her gentle spirit fled, 
So much like life, that for a while 

We scarcely could believe her dead. 

So calm she looked, her lips apart 

Appeared as if about to move, 
Some fond memento to impart, 

Some parting token of her love. 

Yet, mother, would thy mourning child 
(Could she) recall thee here below, 

Though then she cried, with anguish wild, 
" Spare me, O God, this trial ?" — No. 



56 ON THE DEATH OF MY MOTHER, 

In mercy thou wert but removed 

From sorrows yet to come, and woe ; 

And, fondly as thou wert beloved, 
That very love would answer, No. 

Farewell, dear mother ! thou art blest ; 

Thou slumberest with the peaceful dead ; 
And oft thy child, with grief opprest, 

Would lay by thine her weary head. 

Farewell, till in a happier sphere, 

When earthly sorrows grieve no more 

They whom the grave has severed here 
Heaven's opening portals shall restore. 




ON THE LETTER O. 



In gods and in demons 't will ever be found, 

Wicked men it will shun, but in good men abound, 

Yet on woman attends, as vibration on sound. 

On the surface of ocean its presence you see, 

And 'tis always contained in an old hollow tree. 

In hot and cold countries 'tis destined to dwell, 

On mountains, in forests, the anchorite's cell. 

It never inhabits the halls of the great, 

But a cottage prefers to grandeur or state. 

With the Pope it however has always remained, *.. 

And in Rome has for centuries past been detained ; 

In the Catholic's claims it has openly stood, 

Though in justice it aims at the general good; 

It ever has proved the support of the crown, 

In the Hanover line has been always passed down ; 

Our famed London without it would nameless become. 

And its loss would be nearly as fatal to Rome. 



ON THE VISION OF ST. JOHN, 

DURING HIS BANISHMENT TO THE ISLE OF PATMOS. 



Thou, to whose favored view 

Heaven's portals open flew, 
And visions bright of glorious things were given ! 

Thou, to whose piercing ken, 

Unseen before of men, 
The Saviour ope'd the golden gates of heaven ! 

Beloved by him whose love 

No change could ever move — 
No, not the dazzling change from earth to heaven !- 

He to thy ravished sight 

Disclosed his glories bright, 
When, scorned by men, to exile thou wert driven. 

Vain Caesar's vaunted power — 

Poor emperor of an hour ! — 
To banish thee from earthly courts of clay, 

When thy Almighty Friend, 

Before whom kings must bend, 
Could bear thee to the courts of heavenly day ! 



ON THE VISION OF ST. JOHN. 59 

How mean thy purple robe, 

Proud tyrant of the globe, 
Would seem, contrasted with the brilliant sight 

Of Jesus' glorious state, 

And all who round him wait — 
Those countless hosts, arrayed in purest white ! 

And are there here a few, 

To Jesus' precepts true, 
Who, scorned by men, are yet beloved by Heaven? 

A little flock there is, 

Designed for heavenly bliss, 
To whom Christ's love, to whom Christ's grace is given. 

John saw a countless band, 

From every clime and land, 
Redeemed from among men, Heaven's presence fill; 

All clothed in robes of light, 

By Jesus' blood made white 
In Calvary's stream, that fountain open still. 

In Christian virtues fair, 

They Jesus' image bear, 
In spirit and in truth and heavenly love ; 

Till, having left below 

All for his sake, they go 
To join the hosts of his redeemed above. 



ON THE MIRACLE AT MOUNT HOREB. 



" Behold, I will stand before thee there upon the rock in Horeb; and thou 
shalt smite the rock, and there shall come water out of it, that the people may 
drink." — Exodus, xvii. 6. 



Great is the Lord, and great his power ! 

His mercy great — mighty to save ! 
On Horeb did his glory shine, 

Gushed from the rock the rolling wave. 
At his divine, omnipotent command, 

His rod the prophet took — 
O, wondrous act of the Almighty's hand ! 

Forth issued from the flint a bubbling brook ; 
Nature the God of nature's fiat hears; 

What once seemed adamant, a stream appears. 

His chosen people faint with thirst, 
A dreadful lingering death in view ; 

Exhausted in the wilderness, 

Their Maker saw, and pitied too. 

Anguish, and pain, and deep despair 
Seized every tortured soul. 



ON THE MIRACLE AT MOUNT HOREB. 

" Ye are the objects of my tenderest care ; 

Fear not, my people ! — be ye whole ! 
Smite thou the rock ! " Jehovah said. 

A river flowed, as Moses prompt obeyed. 

Type of that spiritual Rock 

Which after ages should behold, 

From whence a stream should issue forth, 
Refreshing the chief Shepherd's fold. 

That Rock was Christ — that saving stream- 
Was life, and health, and peace, 

Which all his church derive from him ; — 
That stream shall never cease. 

" Smite thou the Rock," Jehovah said, 
And Pilate all unconsciously obeyed. 




BRAY HEAD, WICKLOW, 

TO MISS C. S. 



Dear Charlotte ! our ramble along the sea-shore, 
When Bray Head's fair prospect we sought to explore, 

You beg me to give you in verse ; 
And, though no cold critics my lines may commend, 
I ever comply with the wish of a friend, 

And thus our adventures rehearse. 

'T was a bright, glowing day, in the dawn of the year, 
When the primrose and violets begin to appear, 

And Winter seems struggling with Spring ; 
This day the fair youth seemed the victory to gain, 
And dreary old Winter to give up his reign, 

And away his dark mantle to fling. 

The air was as mild as a morning in May, 
The sky was so bright, and the midges so gay, 

All nature appeared to rejoice ; 
The sea, and the waves, as they rolled on the land, 
And sparkled, and dashed the white spray on the sand? 

Seemed to echo the general voice ! 



BRAY HEAD, WICKLOW. 63 

But, though all above us was brilliant and fair, 
Though the sky was so clear, and so balmy the air, 

Yet some traces of winter we found ; 
For when Bray's rugged headland we sought to ascend, 
On our most cautious footsteps we scarce could depend 

From the damp, slippery state of the ground. 

But, mutually lending each other our aid, 
We the summit attained, and were fully repaid 

By the prospect which greeted our sight ; 
Whilst below, 'midst the rocks, the sea eddied and 

boiled, 
With the roar as of cannon, and fruitlessly toiled, 

As the waters were chafed in their might. 

One false step, and our wanderings for ever were o'er, 
And earth's varied beauties would charm us no more, — 

We should sink in the chasm below ! 
From the fearful abyss, then, our eyes let us turn, 
To where Howth and yon minature isle we discern, 

And the waters so peacefully flow. 

Perchance, my dear Charlotte, when hither you stray, 
When your friend may be far o'er these waters away, 

You may think of your wanderings here; 
And wherever that absent one's footsteps may rove, 
Yet Erin's sweet shores and kind friends she will love, — 

They will still be to memory dear ! 



LINES TO 



A BEAUTIFUL BUT VAIN YOUNG LADY. 



Your request, my dear girl, is a delicate task; 
Pray what would you wish me to say ? let me ask. 
Must I tell you your eyes are of heavenly blue ? 
That your face and your features are beautiful, too ? 
Must I tell you all this ? Nay, more, must I say 
These serve but your sweetness and sense to display ? 
No ! a flatterer might tell you all this, but a friend, 
Believe me, will ne'er to such a meanness descend. 

A beautiful person, we constantly find, 

Is not always adorned by a beautiful mind ; 

And though a fair face admiration excite, 

The effect it produces is transient and slight. 

Disappointed we turn, wirh contempt and disdain, 

From a form, though angelic, if heartless and vain ; 

But if mind and if heart correspond with the face, 

To love and esteem admiration gives place ; 

'T is the wind which alone can illumine the whole ; — 

Beauty attracts the sight, but sweetness wins the soul. 



THE MISSIONARY. 



Go, messenger, from realms on high ! 

On wings of love thy mission bear; 
To earth's remotest regions fly, 

And plant thy sacred banner there. 

The red cross wave o'er Afric's sands, 
And bid her swarthy natives know 

Their great Creator's mild commands, 
And at the name of Jesus bow. 

The red cross wave o'er India's soil, 

O'er Ganges' waters raise it high ; 
The Hindoo, worn with heat and toil, 

Shall to its grateful shadow fly. 

The red cross wave where Buddha reigns, 

His idol temples overthrow ; 
Soon shall it burst his iron chains, 

Though forged by Satan's host below. 

The red cross wave o'er Southern seas ; 

Pacific ! be thy islands blest ! 
Breathe soft, ye winds ! Heaven's favoring breeze 

Speed gospel blessings to the West ! 



66 THE MISSIONARY. 

The red cross wave where Northern suns 
Scarce warm the earth, scarce melt the snow 

Where life's dull current feebly runs, 
Scarce felt is nature's genial glow. 

The red cross wave o'er land and sea 
From north to south, from east to west ; 

Let Father, Son, and Spirit, be 

Through all earth's varied nations blest. 




PAIN AND PLEASURE. 



How vain to look for happiness on earth ! 
Friends drop around us, even from our birth ; 
And could we be ourselves exempt from woe, 
Ah ! still the tear of sympathy must flow. 

Yet, O, the tear of sympathy is sweet ! 
The painful heart-throb is with balm replete ; 
Pleasure and pain here ever are combined, 
And tears give pleasure to a feeling mind. 

Here, too, we cannot taste without alloy 
Intense sensations of delight and joy; 
Angels alone, the heights of rapture know, 
And fallen angels feel the depths of woe ! 

Placed in a medium state, let us beware ; 
Heaven be our hope, and virtue be our care, 
Pleasure encourage us our course to steer, 
And pain still warn us what we have to fear. 



ON SEEING SOME CHILDREN BLOWING 
BUBBLES. 



See yonder youthful circle, blowing 

Bubbles high in air, 
While their hearts, with mirth o'erflowing, 

Know no thought or care ! 

See the sparkling globules rise, 

Quickly in succession ! 
Some, ambitious, seek the skies, 

Some, yielding to depression, 
One moment sink, the next to mount on high, 
And end their wavering course more brilliantly. 

Like visions glittering in life's young day, 

Bright as yon globules, like them light as air- 
Like hopes by disappointment swept away, 

Which, vanishing, are followed by despair — 
Like shadowy phantoms of the poet's brain, 

Or like ambition's wild-aspiring schemes, 
Equally bright, and equally as vain, — 

Like fancy's magic, or like lover s dreams, 
Emblems of all by which we're here perplexed- 

This world itself a bubble to the next. 



LINES, 

SUGGESTED BY THE DISTRESS IN IRELAND IN 1 847. 



O, Erin ! how long are thy woes to continue, 
Are thy sorrows and sufferings never to cease ? 

Poor stricken one ! say can no sufferings win you 
From the Father o"f Mercies an answer of peace ? 

Direct to yon cabin your pitying glances, 

See two youthful brothers are laid side by side, 

One dead, and one dying— the pastor advances, 
And the rites of religion are calmly applied. 

He dies ! and the third who was patiently striving 
To give some relief to a fourth worse than he, 

Sees him droop and die, whom they thought was re- 
viving, 
And faints, and soon follows the first stricken three. 

Oh ! this is no fanciful picture of sorrow, 

Would God, that it were ! but look yonder again, 

See that tall manly youth from his mother's breast 
borrow 
The strength to encounter more hardship and pain. 



70 LINES. 

Yes, mothers ! behold that poor infant — look there ! 

'T is deprived of the nourishment nature decreed, 
That the just fainting son may be strengthened to bear 

The labor on which the whole family feed. 

O, England ! my country ! withhold not thy hand 
From the famishing sons of affliction beside thee, — 

While moved with compassion this far distant land 
With noble examples has richly supplied thee. 

Poor Erin ! thine isle like a beacon is shining, 
And prophecy's page is illumed by its light 

That famines must come. Oh, then cease all repining, 
Bright days often follow a dark gloomy night. 

Already from evil has good been extracted, 
Across the broad waters came help from afar; 

Poor Erin ! thy sorrows so deep and protracted, 
Have called to thy aid the American Star. 

With the warm feeling hearts of a generous nation, 
Whose sympathies feel for the whole human race, 

They rush'd to thy succor from every station — 
Oh ! ne'er from thy memory their kindness efface. 



SCENE AFTER A HURRICANE, 

ON THE WESTERN COAST OF IRELAND BOAT FREIGHT- 
ED WITH DEAD BODIES. 



Hark ! hear ye not the piercing cry, 
That doleful mourning, long and loud ? 

The echoing rocks and hills reply 
To the deep wailing of the crowd. 

A boat appears ! with outstretched hand 
And eager eyes her course they hail ; 

But scarcely does she touch the strand, 
Again resounds that mournful wail. 

That boat contains a solemn freight 
Of human corses, lately glowing 

With life and health, perchance elate 
With happiness o'erflowing. 

Redeemed from the devouring tide 
The empty caskets now are borne, 

Each to his own beloved fireside — 
Alas that thus they should return ! 



72 SCENE AFTER A HURRICANE. 

The animating spirits fled, 

Ah ! what avails the lifeless clay ? 

The piercing "keen cry" o'er the dead 
With empty sound shall pass away ! 

But let not thus the warning pass 
Which issues from their humble biers, 

As many a warning voice, alas ! 

Is heard with dull and death-like ears. 

The winds repeat the solemn sound, 
The waters in each rushing wave ; 

Destruction both have scattered round 
And yawned hath many an early grave ! 

Full many a fabric man hath reared, 
One awful moment levelled low, 

When to perform his will prepared, 
God bade the angry wind to blow. 

It swept through nature's wide domain, 
The forest's pride were prostrate cast ; 

The growth of ages strewed the plain, 
Loud groaning in the ruthless blast. 

But who can count the human souls 
That perished in that fearful gale ? 

When the last trumpet shakes the poles, 
It — it alone — shall tell the tale. 



SCENE AFTER A HURRICANE. 

When God's almighty power appeared 
In tempests bursting o'er his head, 

The " still small voice " Elijah heard, 
As to his cave he trembling fled. 

And shall not we, by mercy spared, 

While judgment thus has stalked abroad, 

Be by such dread events prepared 
To listen to the voice of God ? 

That gentle voice, O, may we hear 
In the deep silence of the heart, 

Dispelling all but godly fear, 
And bidding every sin depart. 




WELCOME SONG TO JENNY LIND. 



America, land of the mountain and lake, 

Of the storm, and the torrent's loud roar, 
I have braved the wild waves of the deep for thy 
sake, 
And exult that I tread thy loved shore. 

America, land of the brave and the free, 
The home of the Pilgrims, thou'rt wel- 
come to me ! 

I love thy bold rocks, and I love thy broad plains, 

Thy prairies and forests so grand ! 
And I love them the more, that within them there 
reigns 
The free soul of my own Fatherland. 

America, home of the brave and the free . 
The Minstrel of Sweden rejoices in thee. 

Thy dawning was bright under Washington's star, 

But more glorious thy midday shall shine, 
Thy sun has arisen o'er the nations afar, 
Nor till nature's last doom shall decline. 

America, land of the brave and the free ; 
Meridian glory now smiles upon thee. 



WELCOME SONG TO JENNY LIND. 75 

In Britain's proud halls, they have bowed to my 
strains, 
And success all my efforts have crowned ; 
But my calm Swedish soul uncorrupted remains, 
By the plaudits which echoed around. 

And I welcome the land of the brave and 

the free, 
For the home of the Pilgrims is dearer to 
me. 



ON MUSIC. 



Music, soother of the soul! 

Purest balm to mortals given ! 
Passion bows to thy control, 

Thy sweet strains partake of heaven. 

Thou canst cheer the wounded heart, 
When depressed with earthly woes, 

Comfort gently canst impart, 
Wildest feelings calm compose. 

Joy wakes from thee a lovelier strain ; 

Mirth with thee delights to dwell, 
And, in sportive pleasure's reign, 

Lightly strikes the vocal shell. 

But all thy noblest powers are joined 
To emulate devotion's flame ; 

With strength and harmony combined, 
Be this thy proper end and aim. 

Seraphs golden harps employ 
To celebrate Jehovah's fame, 

While the harmonious choir on high, 
Of spirits blest, resound his name. 



ON MUSIC. 



77 



When, in a melodious song, 

Earth echoes back the heavenly strains, 
Angels the dying notes prolong, 

Sweet music fills the ethereal plains. 




LINES TO A FRIEND, 

ON HIS COMPLAINING OF THE INSUFFICIENCY OF PHIL- 
OSOPHY AS A SUPPORT TO THE MIND UNDER AF- 
FLICTION, AND THAT HE MEANT TO SEEK THAT 
SUPPORT IN RELIGION AND THE SCRIPTURES. 



O, search the bright record, — let nothing restrain 
thee, — 

The earnest pursuit shall be crowned with success ! 
Let not earth, with its varied temptations, enchain thee 

Seek Him who alone can life's pilgrimage bless ! 

Can Science true happiness ever bestow ? 

Will Philosophy prove from fate's arrows a shield, 
Or blunt the barbed shafts of affliction ? Ah, no ! 

Its impotent arm in the conflict must yield. 

Religion alone can the armor supply ; 

The shield must be faith, and the spirit the sword, 
The breastplate of righteousness, — these may defy 

The world, in the name of a crucified Lord ! 



LINES TO A FRIEND. 



79 



O, seek then that armor, — prayer ever obtains it, — 
The Saviour has promised, " Ask, it shall be given j" 

That promise how sacred ! the Bible contains it ; 
He reigns who has made it on earth and in heaven. 

O, seek it in faith ; with humility crave 

That wisdom which science can never supply ; 

That comfort and peace which the world cannot give, 
Nor with which the world's treasures in value can 
vie. 




THE WAGER. 



IN ANSWER TO A CHALLENGE FROM A YOUNG GENTLE- 
MAN, IN WHICH EACH WAS TO WRITE TWENTY LINES 
OF POETRY, WHICH WAS TO BE SUBMITTED TO THE 
JUDGMENT OF FRIENDS. 



A minstrel wreath I'm called to twine,- 
Come, aid me, all ye sisters nine! — 

I've twenty lines to write; 
A rival holds a tempting prize, 
And my poetic power defies, — 

Come, gird thee for the fight ! 

No mean opponent hast thou found, 
To meet thee on Parnassian ground; 

Shouldst thou the laurel gain, 
And this fair company decree 
The meed of victory to thee, 

Thou may'st be justly vain. 



THE WAGER. 8 1 

At friendship's call thou oft hast waked — 
Here glory, honor, fame, are staked — 

Come, lady Muse, defend me ! 
Be thou my sword, be thou my shield ; 
The knight must to the lady yield, 

If thou wilt but befriend me. 

Yet, should the wished-for prize be mine, 
Or this just court award it thine, 

Yet when the contest ends, 
Though poets seldom can agree, 
The world at least one proof shall see 

That rivals may be friends. 




A SKETCH. 



I saw her in beauty, I saw her in pride, 

In life's brightest lustre, youth's earliest bloom, 

When her cheek with the hue of that rose might have 
vied, 
That decks the green sod which encircles her tomb. 

I saw her when, coloress, faded, and pale, 
That lily her delicate emblem might be ; — 

Or the marble on which is inscribed her sad tale, 
Warning others they may soon lie lowly as she. 

I saw her encircled with each magic charm, 

With each witching spell, which earth has to bestow, 

And I saw her shrink back in dismay and alarm, 
When death, hovering over her, menaced his blow. 

I saw her when suffering had blanched her fair cheek 
And her eyes, once so brilliant, now trembled with 
tears ; 

But a sweet, placid smile, and her accents so meek, 
Assured us religion had banished her fears. 



A SKETCH. 



83 



In health's brightest bloom, she never had seemed 
So lovely, so beauteous, so heavenly, as now; 

When her eyes and her smile with wild gayety beamed, 
And her pale cheek was flushed with a delicate glow. 

I saw her as calmly she yielded her breath ; 

The tear was now gone, but the smile still remained 
On her beautiful features, when sleeping in death, 

Which no trace of her sufferings or sorrow retained. 




L'INCONSTANT. 



He saw, he admired her, and sought to inspire 

Her susceptible heart with love's sweetest emotion ; 

He strove to anticipate every desire, 

And silently paid her the deepest devotion. 

He saw the deep blush he could call to her cheek, 
And vainly imagined the conquest his own • 

Then heartlessly left her, fresh triumphs to seek, 
And exult in the victory he thought he had won. 

But he knew not the spirit of womanly pride 

Which, though sweetness itself, she could call to 
her aid ; 

She summoned it now, and successfully tried 
To forget the impression his falsehood made. 

He saw, and too late, with remorse and regret, 

That she viewed him with feelings allied to disdain ; 

He felt that, like him, she could learn to forget, 
And ne'er trifled with woman's affections again. 



SELF-EXAMINATION. 



While darkness shrouds thy mortal sight, 
In nature's solemn stillness, night, 
These questions to thine heart apply, 
And let it answer honestly. 

What have I done that I should not ? 
That which I should have I forgot. 
Have I done aught to mark my way, 
Or, like the Roman, lost a day. 

Have I thought what I fain would hide, 
When my heart's inmost depths are tried ? 
Or said what I should blush to appear, 
When God, and man, and angels hear ? 

Have I employed my tongue in praise 
To him whose mercy crowns my days ? 
Or thought of Him who gave me power 
To think, that I might love him more ? 
6* 



86 



SELF-EXAM INATrON. 



A day is added to my store, — 
Who much receives should render more; 
Since yesterday another given,— 
To-day am I more fit for heaven ? 




LINES ON THE DEATH OF A YOUNG 
LADY. 



Mourn not for Marg'ret ! her sufferings are o'er, 

And her glorified spirit rejoices in bliss; 
Triumphantly crowned, she remembers no more, 

In the joys of the next world, the sorrows of this. 
Conformed to her Saviour in suffering here, 

She drank of the cup which her Father had given, 
And exchanged, for a higher and holier sphere, 

The trials of earth for the treasures of heaven. 



Mourn not for her, though in youth's early bloom 

The summons to leave all most dear has been sent ; 
Though tears, bitter tears, may be shed o'er her tomb, 

He loves her far more who recalls what he lent. 
Yes, Marg'ret ! in thee I have lost one whose love 

Through life I had hoped would my pilgrimage 
cheer ; 
But though thou hast fled to the mansions above, 

My trembling footsteps may follow thee there. 



88 LINES ON THE DEATH OF A YOUNG LADY. 

Mourn not for Marg'ret ! though great be our loss, 

Though her sweet disposition endeared her to all; 
If we strive for the crown, we must take up the cross, 

Else earth would our wayward affections enthrall. 
Though cold is that heart which so warmly could 
glow, 
Though silent that voice which so sweetly would 
thrill, 
Though the sigh may arise, the unbidden tear flow, 
We would bow to the stroke most submissively 
still. 



ON THE DEATH OF THE DOWAGER LADY 
POWERSCOURT.* 



Angels, strike your harps of gold ! 

Who surround the eternal throne ; 
Though the Godhead ye behold, 

Sympathy with man ye own. 
O'er his fallen, yet kindred, race, 

Still ye watch with holy love, 
And, ransonVd through a Saviour's grace, 

Behold him seek your ranks above. 

Hail ye now a happy soul ! 

From our world of woe and care, 
Lo ! she gains the blissful goal, 

Comes your heavenly joys to share, 
Through the portals ot the grave, 

In the steps her Saviour trod, 
Who in death the victory gave, 

And conveyed her home to God. 

* This pious lady had felt a presentiment of her approaching death a week 
before she was attacked with any sickness, and immediately arranged her affairs, 
o the most minute particular, accordingly ; on completing which, she was 
aken ill, and died in a few days. 



90 DEATH OF THE DOWAGER LADY POWERSCOURT. 

Clothed in garments pure and white, 

Cleansed in Calvary's crimson flood, 
Sinners! who (in robes so bright) 

Comes to view her Saviour, God ? 
She who gains a heavenly crown 

Earthly honors meekly wore, 
Gladly laid the burden down — 

Powerscourt was the name she bore. 



Wealth was hers, but she had learned 

Where alone true riches lie, 
And from worldly treasures turned, 

Seeking those beyond the sky. 
Early doomed to feel the smart 

Of affliction's chastening rod, 
She reposed a widowed heart 

On the bosom of her God. 



Through this wilderness she passed, 

Supported by her Saviour's arm, 
And to behold his face at last 

Could death of every sting disarm. 
Hastening her duties to fulfill, 

Assured her Lord would call her home 
From that high statiou which his will 

Said, " Occupy till I shall come," 



DEATH OF THE DOWAGER LADY POWERSCOURT. 91 

Her stewardship she calmly closed, 

Though yet no sickness touched her frame ; 
Her house in order she disposed, 

And then the looked-for summons came. 
She sickened, — human aid was vain, — 

She knew that now her hour was come. 
Angels, pour fourth a glorious strain ! 

Her happy spirit welcome home ! 




METRICAL LETTER TO MISS N- 



My very dear Friend : 

In your absence I send a few lines to remind you 
of those left behind you. I hear that to Derry you 
journeyed quite merry, and your brother to greet you 
had hastened to meet you; to whom, by the way, 
I my compliments pay, with his friend and your own, 
now no longer unknown, for ere this, I dare say, they 
have stolen you away from the town and its noise, to 
the country's sweet joys. Apropos to your city, my 
heart throbbed with pity, as I yesterday read, in the 
history by Reid, of the right noble stand of the pa- 
triot band, by whom in the siege Londonderry was 
manned. Such sufferings and zeal, to our feelings 
appeal, and make Derry shine bright in fair virtue's 
sweet light. 

It surprised me to hear, that her walls still appear 
complete as they were in that notable year, their 
breadth though so great, such strength might create, 
as might cause them to last to so distant a date. O my 
dear, to look down on the river and town in so sacred 
a spot, must not every thought be with past recollec- 



METRICAL LETTER TO MISS N . 93 

tions of chivalry fraught ? No wonder your mind 
caught a tone more refined, and the scene which you 
drew bore so vivid a hue ! 

But, as my vagrant Muse no such prospect now 
views, she must beg you her errors and faults to ex- 
cuse. And, wishing you every joy and delight, and 
hoping (when leisure permits) you will write, 
My dear Mary Ann, 

Pray believe me to be, 
Sincerely affectionate, 

Yours, — F. E. B. 




A SKETCH OF CONNEMARA, 

A ROMANTIC DISTRICT IN THE WEST OF IRELAND. 



Come, my friends, in fancy climb 
Binnebola's heights sublime ! 
See their frowning summits vie, 
Proudly towering to the sky. 
Now behold yon darkening cloud 
Their stately majesty enshroud; 
Now dispersed and chased away 
By the sun's enlivening ray. 
Soon emerging to the view, 
Clothed with every varied hue, 
Chameleon tints of green and blue. 

Now turn we where fair Clifden stands 
And many a pleasing scene commands ; 
But no description can convey 
How picturesque her church and bay; 
Nor can we greater justice do 
Her castle and its beauties, too. 
But come all ye who love the roar 
Where wild, impetuous torrents pour ; 
See that frail bridge sustain the shock 
Of waters dashed from rock to rock. 



A SKETCH OF CONNEMARA. 95 

Collecting from the neighboring hills, 
The flood the very arches fills, 
And, foaming down the craggy steep, 
Forms eddying whirlpools vast and deep. 
Yet here the daring trout can leap, 
And darting through the foam and spray, 
Unharmed pursue their venturous way, 
But see, in treacherous mazes set, 
Yon fisher throws the wily net, 
And cautiously conceals the snare 
Beneath the rock, with jealous care, 
Just where the angry waters boil, 
And thus secures the finny spoil. 

To Roundstone now our way we take, 

O'er mountain moor and lonely lake, 

Where the wild-fowl rear their broods, 

In these romantic solitudes. 

O, that the food, earth, sea, and sky 

For man's subsistence here supply 

By starving thousands were enjoyed, 

Who of these comforts are devoid ! 

O, that these vast unpeopled plains, 

Where so much native beauty reigns — 

Neglected spots of Erin's isle — 

Were decked with culture's cheerful smile ! 

But I must hasten to conclude 



96 



A SKETCH OF CONNEMARA. 



My rambles through these regions rude, 
Lest I my kind friends' patience tire, 
A prospect which I don't admire. 
But should they on some future day 
Again desire with me to stray, 
Perchance my humble Muse once more 
May Connemara's wilds explore. 



TO A FRIEND, 

ON HIS LEAVING ENGLAND FOR SOUTH AMERICA. 



If aught can urge a friend's request 

With more prevailing force, 
'T is parting thus from east to west, 
When meeting must involve, at best, 

Uncertainty, of course. 
Yet think not I would damp the zeal 
A sailor's breast should ever feel ; 

For British bards have sung that zeal 

In music's richest strain, 
And British hearts must ever feel 
How strongly to their love appeal 

Her wanderers of the main ; 
Then go, and prosperous gales convey 
Thy bark upon its destined way ! 

Yet think, while o'er the trackless deep 

Thy vessel smoothly glides, 
Or should the angry billows leap, 
And rise in watery mountains steep, 

Who o'er the storm presides ; 
Remember Him whose sovereign will 
Can bid the winds and waves be still. 



TO A FRIEND. 

Yes, Edward, yes ; the voyage of life 

Demands a sailor's care ; 
Passions, the elements of strife, 
And rocks abound with dangers rife, 

All unsuspected there ; 
Mists blind our eyes, our track pursue, 
And hide our wished-for port from view. 

The Bible is the compass given 
By which our course to steer ; 

When tossed by billows, tempest driven, 
" A pilot to the port of heaven " 
Points with directions clear — 

He who once trod the briny wave 

To prove his mighty power to save. 




TO A YOUNG LADY DUPvING SICKNESS. 



My gentle Jane, accept a willing lay, 
An honest tribute most sincerely penned 

No empty compliments I mean to pay, 
But simply breathe the wishes of a friend. 

Perchance the muse may prompt a serious strain, 

As one best suited to a suffering hour ; 
But soon may'st thou both health and strength regain, 

Nor feel the sad effects of sickness' power. 

Yet think, dear girl, while yet it pleases Him 
(Who chastens whom he loves) your faith to try, 

Who calls for clouds the youthful eye to dim, 

That earth's vain scenes may pass less dazzling by ; 

Who summons pain, or sickness, or distress, 

To show the emptiness of all below, 
To teach fond man that He alone can bless, 

That lasting peace from Heaven alone can flow. 

Oh, think of what makes even sickness blest, 

Without which health and earth's best gifts are vain, 

Which gives to life's true joys their purest zest, 
And renders death itself eternal gain. 



IOO TO A YOUNG LADY DURING SICKNESS. 

I wish thee all which this world can supply, 
I wish thee health, and happiness, and ease ; 

But all that's bright must fade, that lives must die — 
Then, oh ! dear Jane, I wish thee more than these. 

I wish thee endless life beyond the tomb, 
Pleasures that never fade, nor joys that fly; 

Leaves " for the healing of the nations "* bloom 
In that blest land, on trees that never die ! 



'* And in the midst of the city was there the tree of life, and the leaves of 
t he tree were for the healing of the nations."— Rev. xxii. z. 




OS^»- 



LINES FOR AN ALBUM. 



TO MISS A. S. 



Alicia bids me wake the lay, 

Alicia courts my muse ; 
Sweet girl, with pleasure I obey, — 

'T were painful to refuse ; 

For well I feel, though weak the strain, 
Though poor the lines may flow, 

No critic harsh have I to gain, 
Approval to bestow. 

Alicia loves the simplest proof 

Of friendship and regard ; 
To gain her smile were boon enough 

To inspire a worthier bard. 

But much I fear her poet's lyre, 
Though tuned with earnest heart, 

Can never equal or aspire 
To half her painter's art. 



LINES FOR AN ALBUM. 

No flowers have I of hue so bright 

As his, to adorn the page ; 
No brilliant tints to attract the sight, 

And pleased regard engage ; 

Else should the rose of England twine 
With Erin's shamrock green, 

And friendship's ivy-leaf divine 
Bloom verdantly between. 




THE THREE AGES OF HUMAN LIFE. 



Childhood, careless age, farewell ! 

Thy scenes have passed away, 
And it makes the heart in my bosom swell, 
While thus I sing thy parting knell, 

And think of thy joyous day. 

Youth, thou art speeding on thy course, 

And art gliding swiftly by ; 
Each hour augments the rapid force 
With which, like a torrent from its source, 

Thy rapid moments fly. 

Age, with the silver locks, art thou 

Destined my fate to mark ? 
Cheerless and sad thou seemest now ; 
Thy withered cheek and thy wrinkled brow 

Unlovely are and dark. 

Life, thou art ever changing, still 

Fleeting from goal to goal, 
With the stealthy pace of a trickling rill, 
For eternity's boundless sea, to fill 

Thy fair, but fragile, bowl. 



LINES 

SUGGESTED BY READING THE FOLLOWING ACCOUNT OF 
INSTANCES OF BRAVERY AT THE DEFENCE OF A 
MEXICAN BATTERY AT VERA CRUZ 1 

["At the Mexican battery, which fought so well, when the flag-staff was 
shot away, an officer tore the flag from the remnant of the staff, jumped upon 
jhe parapet, and held it in his hand, until he himself was shot down. This 
was done three times."] 



Standard of Mexico fall'n from thy glory, 
Yet wert thou grasp'd by a Patriot hand ; 

Brave hearts of ev'ry clime, hear the sad story, 
Mourn for his fate through Columbia's land. 

The flag of his country, before the invader, 
With anguish he saw was just ready to fall ; 

" My country !" he cried, and sprang forward to aid her, 
Snatch'd the flag, and once more it wav'd high o'er 
the wall. 

The flag-staff was shatter'd — he flung it aside 
And held the torn emblem of freedom on high ; 

" Oh ! on, my brave soldiers," he fearlessly cried, 
" With this let us live, or with this let us die ! " 



LINES. I0 5 



Once more from the battery a volley resounded, 
And every shot carried death in its track ; 

Columbia's bravest gazed on them astounded ? 

But soon their bold fire, with dire sweep echoed 
back. 

Down dropp'd the brave Mexican shot through the 
heart — 

The banner was steep'd in his fresh flowing blood ; 
But not with his life did the spirit depart 

With which, as a martyr, he nobly had stood. 

Another was found on the instant to stand 

In the place where he proved as a mark to the foe : 

He fell too !— yet still a third stretch'd forth his hand 
To grasp the lov'd banner, and then be laid low. 

Columbia's standard now proudly floats o'er 
The once beauteous city of fair Vera Cruz ; 

But when shall war's triumphs be echoed no more, 
Which each faithful Christian most painfully views ? 

Oh ! when shall the clarion no longer be heard, 
And these contests and strifes between brethren 
cease, 
When shall man— proud man— bow to his Lord's writ- 
ten word, 
And the reign of Messiah be hallo w'd by peace ? 



ON THE DEATH OF A FAVORITE CAT. 



Gentlest of the feline race, 
Pet of our domestic hearth, — 
Long we'll mourn thy placid face, 
Purring song and playful mirth. 

Seven long years thy faith we tried, 
Favorite of our house and home ; 
How we'll miss thee from our side, 
How regret thy mournful doom. 

Our returning steps to greet, 
Thou would'st frisk the room around, 
And, with light and nimble feet, 
O'er the chairs and tables bound. 

Or the market basket smell, 
With sharpened scent for morsels rare 
For thy instinct knew full well, 
Poor pussy's dinner would be there. 

Honest as the canine race, 
Besides the viands thou wouldst sit 
With air demure and patient face, 
Nor 'till 't was given thee, touch a bit. 



ON THE DEATH OF A FAVORITE CAT. 107 

Yet, though gentle as thou wert, 

No mouse dare near thy precincts come, 

Or no precaution could avert 

From him the hapless felon's doom. 

Thy milk-white fur so soft and sleek 
Would, with keen anger, quickly rise, 
And, tigress-like, thy prey thou'dst seek, 
And fire like flash thy amber eyes. 

Thy sympathies, poor puss, were all 
To nature true — a mother's love, — 
Brood after brood of kittens small, — 
Thy faithful tenderness may prove. 

Oh ! had'st thou died by nature's stroke, 
Had age, with gradual sure decay, 
Thy senses dimmed, thy life-thread broke, 
We might have seen thee pass away 

With less regret, though not with eyes 
E'en then unmoistened with a tear ; 
But ah ! poor puss, a sad surmise 
Afflicts us, that thy short career 

Was shorter made by human means, 
Which bade thee yield thy parting breath ; 
That poison rankled in thy veins ! 
And caused thy sufferings and death. 



108 ON THE DEATH OF A FAVORITE CAT. 

We've laid thee in a quiet space, 
Where forest trees will o'er thee wave, 
And spring's first vedure mark the place 
Which holds poor pussy's humble grave. 

There shall our footsteps often turn, 
And memory on our favorite dwell, 
Our hearts with love and pity burn; 
Alas, poor pussy, fare thee well. 




ON THE BAPTISM OF AN INFANT. 



Creator of the human race, 
Almighty Father of mankind, 

I humbly bow before thy face, — 
O, may my child thy favor find ! 

Saviour ! obedient to thy word 
I bring my infant son to thee ; 

Accept and bless him, gracious Lord ! 
Say, " Suffer him to come to me ! " 

Baptized with water all must be, 
According to thy plain command, 

And cleansed by sovereign grace, as free 
As water poureth through the land. 

Baptized in the most sacred name 
Of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, 

O, may my son thy mercy claim, 
And gain the grace by nature lost ! 

My cherub boy, thy infant smiles 
Bring gladness to thy mother's heart, 

Which many a painful thought beguiles, 
In which thy future fate hath part. 
7* 



ON THE BAPTISM OF AN INFANT. 

But He who loved thy helpless race, 
And clasped them fondly to his breast, 

His providence thy wants embrace ! 
On this thy parent's hope must rest. 

He can through life thy wants supply, 
In death, his mercy still can save, 

On cherub's wings can make thee fly, 
And bear thee safe o'er Jordan's wave. 




TO A FRIEND 

FOR CHRISTMAS DAY, 1 8— . 



Accept this trifling mark of love ! 
Affection's hand its meshes wove ; 
May " silken cords " as closely twin'd, 
Our hearts and souls together bind ! 

May heaven its blessings on thee pour ! 
Thy purse contain a golden store, 
And love and truth, those gems divine, 
More bright than gold, be ever thine ! 

But all earth's treasures still must fade ! 
The true, the loved —be lowly laid ; 
Then be thy surest riches stor'd 
In brighter worlds, with Christ the Lord ! 

This day, we hail his heavenly birth ; 
This day, a babe he came on earth. 
Forsook the glories of the skies, 
To win for man the " heavenly prize." 

Then may we lay up treasures there 
In heaven's blest courts, so bright and fair ! 
That world of peace and joy above, 
Eternal as the Saviour's love ! 



ON THE BIRTH OF AN INFANT. 



Welcome, my darling, to thy mother's heart, — 

A gift from God, a precious trust thou art; 

A soul, confided to thy parent's care, 

To train for heaven and Christ's blest mansions there. 

Like Moses, in his ark of reeds and mud, 
Thy fragile bark floats on a troubled flood, 
Launched on the waves of this world's stormy tide, 
More dangerous than Egyptia's waters wide. 

But the same God who interposed to save, 

And snatched him from the Nile's o'erwhelming 

wave, — 
That providence, which Pharaoh's daughter sent, 
And to her heart his tears made eloquent 

His fate o'erruled, and He whose word can save, 
Caused her to draw him from his watery grave 
And take him for her own,— that Hebrew boy, 
Whom cruel Pharaoh's mandate would destroy — 

That providence, my babe, can shelter thee 
From all the storms of life's tempestuous sea, 
And bear thee safely to that happy shore 
Where all its waves and storms can reach no more. 



TO ANNIE. 



Though dark be the season of dreary December, 

A wreath we may pluck from an evergreen tree, 
And when Erin's kind daughters I fondly remember, 

A garland I'll twine, my dear Annie, to thee. 
The ivy, revealing of friendship the feeling, 

The holly of Scotia's famed bard shall be thine ; 
While mistletoe blending, its elegance lending, 

For thee, my dear Annie, a garland I'll twine ! 

And though far away soon my footsteps may wander, 

And the banks of the Foyle I no longer may see, 
Full oft on the friends far removed shall I ponder, 

And my thoughts shall revert, my dear Annie, to 
thee! 
Or should music, soft stealing o'er each tender feeling, 

And touching the chords in fond memory's shrine, 
Full oft on each note, thy remembrance shall float, 

And the voice of its numbers, dear Annie, be thine. 



AN ACROSTIC. 

FOR AN ALBUM. 



J oyfully I court the Muse, 
A nd wake for thee the votive lay ; 
N or thou, dear maid, the boon refuse, 
E ntreating which my vows I pay. 

E steemed, and honored, and beloved, 
L et me, dear Jane, thy friendship claim ; 
E ager to have these lines approved, 
A nd prizing naught like thy sweet name,- 
N o, not a word thy tongue can frame, — 
O , smile upon my simple lay ! 
R eceive my vows this festive day. 

P rizing a world of bliss above, 
O , may thy years on earth be blest ! 
P romoting all which Christians love, 
E ternal be thy happy rest ! 



HYMN. 



O'er the dreary waste of waters 

Where my dear one's footsteps roam, 

Father ! be thy care extended ! 
God of mercy and of love ! 

As of old, almighty Saviour ! 

Bid the winds and waves be still ; 
Now, as then, the powers of nature 

Wait upon thy sovereign will. 

Spread your shelt'ring wings around him, 
Ye whom heaven's blest mission bear. 

Holy angels, guardian spirits, 
Take, O, take him to your care ! 

Still this fallen world ye visit ; 

Though unseen, his steps attend ; 
Viewless messengers of mercy, 

From all ill his course defend ! 

And when life's short voyage is over, 
When the waves of Jordan roll, 

O, may angels round him hover, 

Heaven's blest shores receive his soul ! 



ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF MY 
BIRTHDAY. 



God of my life ! another year 
Of that short life is past, 

And this for aught that I can tell 
May be decreed at last. 

As wave is urged on wave, 
Year after year rolls by, 

Bearing me ownward to the shores 
Of bright eternity, 

Eternity, or wished, 

Or feared, must come ; 
Beyond earth's narrow bounds 

Is placed our home. 

Whether the golden bowl 

Unbroken shall remain, 
Whether the silver cord 

Its links unsnapped retain, 

Till nature yield 

To time's all-powerful sway, 
And the tired spirit gently quit 

The tottering clay. — 



ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF MY BIRTHDAY. 117 

Or whether, ere the charms 

Of life are fled, 
The fatal shaft of death 

Lay low my youthful head, — 

Is only known to Him 

Who reigns above, 
But who extends to all 

A father's care and love. 

Whether the coming year 

Be doomed to be 
A year of peace and joy, 

Or fraught with misery, 

I know not, and 't were vain 

For me to know 
What portion I'm assigned, 

Of joy or woe. 

He who the sparrow's fall, 

Deigns to decree, 
Yet rules the monarch's fate, 

Will care for me. 

He, to whose piercing eye 
A thousand years are one,— 

He will appoint my lot 
And mark my span ! 



Il8 ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF MY BIRTHDAY. 

He will appoint ? — he has, 

Ere time began ; 
E'en / was not o'erlooked 

In Heaven's bright plan. 

The meanest child of earth 

May — must — sustain 
Some one connecting link 

In Time's great chain. 

He in his wisdom planned 

My course through life ; 
He saw if I should fall 

Or conquer in the strife. 

He knows the soul he formed, 
He hears each feeble prayer, 

Which, when to Heaven breathed, 
Finds entrance there. 

He knows the heart he framed, 

Each feeling ere it rise ; 
He sees each struggling tear, 

He hears its sighs. 

He knows each blessing's worth, 
He know's each trial's power, 

Sustaining strength imparts 
In sorrow's hour. 



ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF MY BIRTHDAY. II9 

Through every scene of life 

His guardian care extends, 
Nor with this fleeting breath 

His kindness ends. 

For, when the fluttering pulse 

And closing eye, 
In the last mortal hour, 

Call man to die, 

If in this lower sphere 

He has performed his part, 
Fulfilled his Maker's will 

With single heart, 

He bears his spirit hence 

To realms above, 
Where it will flourish in the beams 

Of everlasting love. 

In his protecting care 

May I confide, 
And all my future life 

O, may he deign to guide ! 



LINES TO AN OLD SCHOOLFELLOW. 



My dearest Elizabeth, at your desire 

I exert my poetical vein, 
And if not the muses, let friendship inspire, 
Although not a spark of the radiant fire 

Of genius embellish the stream. 

We've been children together — now childhood is 
past 

The spring-time, the dawn of our years, 
'T is gone ! and our summer will vanish as fast ; 
O, let us remember that youth will not last, 

Nor sigh when grave autumn appears ! 

We've been school-fellows, playmates, companions, 
and friends ; 
May time our affection improve ! 
May we rival each other in laudable ends, 
While, matured by experience, our judgment com- 
mends 
Our early attachment and love ! 



LINES TO AN OLD SCHOOLFELLOW. 121 

Companions are numerous, friends are but rare, 

True friendship but seldom is found ; 
'T is a delicate plant, must be cherished with care, 
Requires showers and sunshine, warm soil and 
pure air, 
While fenced and well guarded around. 

The soft tear in sorrow, the bright smile in joy, 

True friendship must ever bestow ; 
Sincerity pure and unmixed with alloy, 
While firmness must guard, lest the cold world 
destroy 

The heartfelt, ennobling glow. 

The cold world — ah ! yes, my dear girl, 't is indeed 

Cold, heartless, and dangerous, too ; 
From its snares and temptations, O, may we be 

freed ! 
Its frowns may we brave, with heaven for our need, 

When we bid it for ever adieu. 



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HECKMAN 

BINDERY INC. 

jfik DEC 88 

, #(H#- N. MANCHESTER 



